Universal Health Care In Canada

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Health care is continuously evolving worldwide, however, healthcare amongst countries can be tremendously different. They are different in terms of the coverage their nation receives. The types of universal health care are single payer, two-tier, and insurance mandate. Canada itself is lucky enough to be a country that is single payer, for now. This means that the government will provide healthcare insurance for individuals and fund most of their healthcare needs. (Universal Coverage Is Not “Single Payer” Healthcare, 2013) For a while now there has been talk of Canada adopting the two tiered health system. This could have a considerable effect on the Nuclear Medicine department by having shorter wait times, more job opportunities, and more community involvement. Individuals working in the health field may wonder how this will affect them. …show more content…

Within each province these times may vary and may be different depending on the circumstance. Wait times are broken down into two segments. These segments are the time in which the physician has put in a referral to a specialist and the second is the time between seeing the specialist and actually receiving treatment. The first segment has a 8 week wait time and the second has 10 weeks. The wait time varies depending on the procedure required for the patient. The average wait times across Canada for a whole body bone scan is 3.3 weeks, 4 weeks for a CT, and 10.4 weeks for a MRI. (Waiting Your Turn: Wait Times For Health Care In Canada, 2015 report, 2015) (WAIT TIMES, n.d) If there was more access to private Nuclear Medicine clinics within Canada we could tremendously decrease the amount of people on a wait list and this would have an incredible affect on

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